Sc. 4.
"Ned, prythee come out of that fat room."
I suspect we should read hot room.
"Pitiful-hearted Titan, that melted at the sweet tale of the son's."
So I read, with the two earliest 4tos; the others and the folio have sun for 'son's'; and, with Malone, I see a reference to the Tale of Phaethon. Of the double genitive there are many instances. Theobald, who is followed by Singer, read butter for 'Titan,' thinking there was an incongruity. But the Prince, in the exuberance of his spirits, spoke rather at random, heedless of the unconnectedness of his discourse.
"If thou didst, then behold that compound."
It may be that never has been omitted before 'didst.'